Let’s not get bogged down in the apparently small issues that separate the two royal charters. In the end we are talking principles – about the separation of powers between government and a free press in a democracy.
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It’s a battle that’s been brewing in the air for quite some time but last night finally brought the ultimate smackdown between the UK’s less popular soaps.
The nationwide campaign, which runs until October 19th, will target over 400 Premier League and UK-based Champions League games, as well as England’s World Cup qualifiers against Montenegro and Poland.
Playlister will enable audiences to find out what music is being played on BBC Radio, allowing anyone with a BBC account to create playlists and export music to third party streaming services such as YouTube and Spotify.
In his first major speech since taking over the corporation in April, Lord Hall said that the BBC plans to move from being catch-up TV to online TV, allowing users to buy TV shows and keep them permanently.
The phone is expected to curve from top to bottom, rather than from side to side, and is to become the world’s lightest OLED device.
In his first major speech since taking charge of the corporation in April, director general Tony Hall talked of plans to implement time-shifted viewing and a next generation iPlayer.
The ‘ground breaking’ show saw a real life couple runt away in a cube in the middle of a studio, clean themselves off and then chit chat with Mariella Frostrup and some sex experts (god help us all) about the grimy details.
For the first time the channels will provide a single destination for viewers – and will offer original content.
Bob Wootton is not short of an opinion or two, and having spent 15 years lobbying and representing advertisers for ISBA, where better to start his new column than the biggest media merger in history…
